Sudan’s army chief meets Qatar leader in diplomatic push

Qatar Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani receives Sudanese army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan in Doha on Thursday. (QNA)
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Updated 07 September 2023
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Sudan’s army chief meets Qatar leader in diplomatic push

  • Burhan on Wednesday issued decree dissolving the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in major blow to peace talks

DOHA: Sudanese army chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan met Qatar’s Emir on Thursday during his third trip abroad since war broke out in April, after also visiting Egypt and South Sudan in recent days.

Al-Burhan, whose troops are fighting the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces or RSF, had spent months under siege inside the military headquarters in Khartoum and stayed in conflict-hit Sudan until late August.

In Doha, he received a red carpet welcome and discussed “the latest developments in the situation and challenges facing Sudan” with Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, said a Qatari royal court statement.

Gen. Al-Burhan left Doha on Thursday afternoon, the official Qatar News Agency said.

The war between Gen. Al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohammed Hamdan Daglo, has killed at least 5,000 people, according to a conservative estimate from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data project.

Late on Wednesday, Gen. Al-Burhan issued a decree dissolving the RSF, while the US slapped sanctions on senior commander Abdelrahim Hamdan Dagalo, the brother of the paramilitary leader.

Sudan’s ruling Transitional Sovereignty Council said in a statement the decree was “based on the repercussions of these forces’ rebellion against the state, the grave violations they committed against citizens, and the deliberate sabotage of the country’s infrastructure.”

Rights campaigners have blamed the RSF and allied militias for reported atrocities including rape, looting and the mass killings of ethnic minorities, primarily in the restive western region of Darfur.

The army has also been accused of abuses, including reports of indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas with RSF presence.

Al-Burhan made his first foray outside the military headquarters last month and has visited regional allies in recent weeks.

Since leaving the capital Khartoum, he has been based in Port Sudan, an eastern city that has been spared the fighting. Government officials and the United Nations have similarly relocated to the coastal city which hosts Sudan’s only functioning airport.

Late last month, as rumors swirled of negotiations aimed at ending the crisis, Al-Burhan flew to Egypt, historically his closest ally, followed by a visit to South Sudan this week.

“The significance of (the trips abroad) is to confirm the legitimacy of Al-Burhan with the international community,” said Ashraf Abdulaziz, editor-in-chief of independent Sudanese daily Al-Jarida.

Both Cairo and Juba have sought to mobilize regional and international efforts to end the nearly five-month conflict, after mediation attempts in the early stages of the war had repeatedly floundered. Multiple truces brokered by the United States and Saudi Arabia were systematically violated, before the two mediators adjourned talks in June.

Announcing sanctions on Wednesday, the US Treasury said that under Abdelrahim Hamdan Daglo, RSF fighters “have engaged in acts of violence and human rights abuses, including the massacre of civilians, ethnic killings and use of sexual violence.”

Many of the abuses took place in the Darfur region of Sudan, it said.

Daglo called the sanctions against him “unfair” in comments on Thursday to Sky News Arabia, a TV channel based in the United Arab Emirates, which observers say is close to the RSF.

The US State Department also placed the RSF’s West Darfur commander Abdul Rahman Juma on its blacklist for what Washington called “his involvement in a gross violation of human rights.”

As well as leaving thousands dead, the war since April 15 has also forced 4.8 million people from their homes — 1 million of whom have crossed borders — according to the UN.


US Embassy resumes mechanism meetings ‘at full capacity’

US Embassy building in Awkar east of Beirut on June 23, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 11 sec ago
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US Embassy resumes mechanism meetings ‘at full capacity’

  • Next meeting is scheduled for Feb. 25, settling debate in Lebanon over committee’s fate after postponement of January session
  • Beirut hopes resumption will allow US to press Israel for concessions in return for commitments to ceasefire security terms

BEIRUT: The US Embassy in Beirut said on Friday that the mechanism committee will meet on Feb. 25 to discuss next steps on Lebanon’s security.

The US-led five-member committee was established in the wake of the Israel-Hezbollah war in late 2024.

In a statement issued jointly with US Central Command, the embassy said that “the military coordination framework, as established in the cessation of hostilities agreement outlined on Nov. 27, 2024, remains fully in place and is operating at full capacity, with the same goals, participants and leadership.”

The embassy also listed upcoming meetings dates for March 25, April 22 and May 20, saying “these engagements will continue to serve as the primary forum for military coordination among the participating parties,” and adding that the mechanism will remain the key platform for such coordination.

A committee meeting had been tentatively scheduled for Feb. 18, but the participating parties did not receive official confirmation from the US.

A Lebanese official told Arab News that the Feb. 25 meeting would be limited to military personnel, with no civilian participation. “The US Embassy’s statement emphasized the participation of all parties, including the French side,” the source added.

The mechanism committee meetings constitute the only approved channel of communication for addressing military issues related to the cessation of hostilities between Lebanon and Israel.

The embassy’s announcement settled the debate in Lebanon over the committee’s fate after the postponement of a meeting scheduled for this month, amid Israeli pressure on Lebanon to convert civil negotiations into bilateral talks with US participation.

A Lebanese official closely following the work conducted by the mechanism committee previously told Arab News that there was “a structural crisis within the mechanism committee, specifically within the US delegation.”

The mechanism committee has held a series of meetings at the Ras Al-Naqoura border crossing. These meetings were described as technical and military in nature, and focused on establishing field communication mechanisms, addressing issues arising from violations, and ensuring continued coordination in line with the terms of the signed agreement. Civilian representatives from Lebanon and Israel were later added to the committee’s meetings.

At the beginning of December, Lebanon appointed former ambassador Simon Karam to head the Lebanese delegation to the Military Technical Committee for Lebanon. Karam attended meetings on two occasions, Dec. 3 and 19, during which he highlighted Lebanon’s demand that displaced residents be allowed to return to border villages as a prerequisite for discussing any economic buffer zone. A meeting scheduled for Jan. 14 was later postponed.

The Lebanese state hopes that the resumption of the mechanism’s meetings will enable the US to secure concessions from Israel in exchange for its commitment to the terms of the agreement to cease military operations, including the withdrawal from positions Israel still occupies inside Lebanese territory.

According to the official source, Lebanon is seeking through this request “to facilitate the next stages of the process of establishing the state monopoly on arms, particularly north of the Litani River.” The source said this followed the Lebanese army’s confiscation of illegal weapons south of the Litani, a step the US welcomed, while Hezbollah has refused to disarm north of the Litani line.

Another official source familiar with previous mechanism committee meetings said that “the Lebanese side stated that Israeli army violations on Lebanese territory provide Hezbollah with a justification to commit to its refusal to surrender its weapons.”

Lebanese army commander Gen. Rodolphe Haykal is scheduled to visit Washington next week, and will present to the Council of Ministers on Feb. 5 the next stages of the army’s plan to confine weapons between the Litani and Awali rivers.

According to the media office at the Presidential Palace, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Gen. Haykal reviewed on Friday the latest security developments in the south, amid repeated Israeli strikes and potential escalation risks along the border.

They also discussed Gen. Haykal’s meetings with US officials to “look into ways to support the army and coordinate on security issues at the border.”

Haykal also met Maj. Gen. Patrick Gauchat, head of mission and chief of staff of the UN Truce Supervision Organization at the command’s headquarters.

On Friday, an Israeli drone strike targeted a car in Seddiqin, Tyre, killing Mohammed Ahmad Youssef, the Lebanese Ministry of Health said.

Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee claimed that the strike was carried out in response to “Hezbollah violations,” accusing the party of “rebuilding itself.”

Israeli reconnaissance aircraft continued to fly over Beirut and its southern suburb throughout the day, in what Lebanon considered a violation of its airspace.

Meanwhile, the Lebanese army conducted armored patrols in the border town of Yaroun on Friday morning, after the Israeli army entered the town on Thursday night.